Does LC use this as an example of the confusion that reigned that day? No, they use it in an attempt to bolster their claim that U93 did not crash in Penn.
"Loose Change" states, and by extension then so does Avery, that U93 did not crash in Penn.
Small correction, U93 didnt crash into the Pentagon, that was Flight 77. U93 was the plane that crashed in Shanksville.
They then go on to state that it landed in Cleveland.
Thats correct, they do say that.
That they also say that D1989 landed there is immaterial.
No it isnt, the BBC make out that Dylans thinks the mistake they made in the control room was actually right, not wrong, as they then go on to tell us it was. But not only do they make out he denies Delta 1989 existed, they get a passenger that was "on the flight" as if to say he's even denying the passengers even took the flight. They even show her ticket and she says "
this was the very boarding pass"! They then go on the explain the story of Delta 1989, where it took off from, why it had to make an emergency landing. etc, as if LC was denying that. In their explanation, when they say "in the confusion" Delta 1989 was being mistaken for U93, they imply that Dylan has simply refused to acknowledge that original mistake. This would have been a great responce to Dylans argument, if he had actually said this. In fact, they didnt even address his actual argument. Dont get me wrong, what he actually said was still pretty loopy, speculative and wrong but thats not the argument they were debunking.
The BBC then shows that D1989 was confused with U93 and was indeed the plane initially reported as having been hijacked and as being U93.
And pretends that Dylan is simply not correcting such a simple error like that. Theres a hundred other things Dylan has actually said they could have picked on to show how silly the LC arguments were, instead they choose to pretend he said something he didnt.
Does the BBC imply that LC does not believe that D1989 did not land there? No!
They imply in the strongest way possible that Dylan doesnt even acknowledge the flight existed at all and none of the passengers even took the flight. They imply that when they originally mistook Delta 1989 for U93, that he just refused to acknowledge that it was a mistake.
Is this in any way similar to the Miller quote subject? No!
Of course it is. They spend a whole section debunking a claim he never made.